The Blacklist Season 2 features a diverse FBI task force with a black unit chief (Harry Lennix as Harold Cooper), a Middle Eastern-American tech analyst (Amir Arison as Aram Mojtabai promoted to main cast), and the introduction of Iranian Mossad agent Samar Navabi (Mozhan Navabi) in Episode 2, representing standard network TV diversity for a 2014-2015 procedural that feels organic to a modern federal agency setting without clashing with source material or history. Leads are white (James Spader, Megan Boone). Storytelling centers on espionage thrillers involving Red's blacklist, his feud with Berlin, the Cabal conspiracy, and Liz Keen's personal mysteries with her husband Tom, prioritizing twists, action, and criminal hunts over social messaging. A few standalone episodes touch incidental progressive-adjacent issues like human trafficking of Chinese-American women (Ep20), corporate environmental poisoning (Ep11), a vigilante targeting abusers (Ep13, battered women angle), African child kidnapping (Ep6, Dembe backstory), and eco-terrorism (Ep5), but these serve as 'villain of the week' plots without lectures, identity politics, systemic critiques, or narrative dominance. No LGBTQ representation, race/gender-swaps, or overt feminism/patriarchy critiques. Creator Jon Bokenkamp interviews show no activist intent for inclusion or norm-challenging. Reception was strong (83% RT, millions of viewers) with praise for entertainment value and Spader's performance; zero contemporary or retrospective backlash labeling it 'woke,' unlike later seasons' complaints about social justice insertions.